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In an action atmosphere mixed with horror, the movie revolves around a young girl who seems to be weird. She faces a set of evidence of bloody and horrific massacres, but she is still mysterious and does not suffer from a strange thing which inflect the other people.
Taking only the bare bones of its story from the book that inspired it, this film is as much a comment on cinema - and on other forms of contemporary art - as it is an experience in its own right, but it is no less gripping for that.
Tag has enjoyed a healthy run on the midnight festival circuit, but from the outset its sleazy tone is off-putting even by late-night horror standards.
The whole film is suffused with dream-like sadness and despair, which Sion Sono captures in wide shots of forests and snowy landscapes that are interspersed with the action.